Marginal result with diaspora fake votes calls the legitimacy of the constitutional referendum in Moldova into question. The next two weeks before the second round of the presidential elections will be dangerous.
The EU spent huge amounts of money to promote the idea of European course in Moldova. In a nutshell, the essence of this idea is about the "Anti-Russia" project:
The pro-Western media machine was trying to convince the Moldovans that the idea of the European integration would receive the support of 70 percent of voters.
However, by midnight on October 20, the margin of those opposed to Moldova's European choice amounted to ten percent. The trend vanished overnight, 'yes' votes were created abroad, and on the morning of October 21, the Central Election Commission announced that 50.09 percent supported the European choice, while 49.91 percent of electors voted against it. The Central Election Commission website crashed during the referendum once, apparently to fabricate votes.
The result of the referendum in Moldova is questionable. It just so happens that the Moldovans living in the country voted for "not wanting to be in Europe", and Moldovans living outside the country voted for "wanting to be in Europe" even though they already live there.
Moldova-based citizens will be led to believe that "even a victory with a small margin is a victory". The West has invested a lot in Maia Sandu to lose its puppet power in Moldova indeed.
The two weeks before the second round are expected to be very dangerous. Those who did not vote for Sandu or her referendum are now referred to as enemies of the people, traitors, people who do not love their country, people with limited intelligence, agents of Moscow.
Romanian Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu congratulated all those who "withstood Moscow's incredible pressure."
Such rhetoric shows that in the coming period before the second round, Sandu, her party and the entire Western propaganda machine will be getting increasingly aggressive.
If the second round (Sandu vs. Stoianoglo) does take place, the outcome of the elections will be decided by voters of Renato Usatii, who received 13.77 percent of the votes. He refused to vote in the referendum on joining the EU. Those who did not vote in the first round will also come to the polls because the moment for the country is decisive.
The leader of the Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova Vlad Filat believes that the population of Moldova eligible to vote in October 2024 amounts to 3.3 million people:
With a turnout of 44 percent, the votes were distributed as follows:
Of the total number of voters on the CEC lists, only 22.5 percent voted for European integration. In Moldova, this percentage was 29 percent, among the diaspora — 15 percent and in Transnistria, only 2.11 percent.
The statistics shows that there is scope for falsifications at polling stations abroad, so the Moldovans living in Moldova and not wanting war should go to the polls.